The substantial point: the Tribunal's reasoning
21 In order to appreciate the submissions of counsel in relation to the point of substance, accurately identified in the Application and amended Application, it is necessary to refer at some length to the Tribunal's reasons for decision.
22 Both Mr A and Mr B based their claims to refugee status on two fears: persecution on account of political opinion and persecution on account of membership of a particular social group (homosexuals).
23 Mr A's claim in relation to political opinion stemmed partly from his membership of an opposition political party, the Bangladesh Nationalist Party ("BNP"), but, more particularly, from the fact that an uncle was a prominent member of this party and an active opponent of the Bangladeshi government, led by the Awami League ("AL"). The Tribunal was satisfied that Mr A enjoyed a close relationship with his uncle, to whom he was similar in appearance. The Tribunal accepted that the uncle had been subjected to harassment over some years, on account of his political activities. To escape further harassment, at one stage the uncle fled Bangladesh; but, later, he returned in order to continue his opposition to the AL. He was arrested on charges of terrorism, illegal arms possession and murder. He had already been imprisoned for four years awaiting trial. In his reasons for decision, the Tribunal member said he had searched a number of data bases for information about the uncle but had not found any reference to him being a terrorist that was not sourced to government-controlled or AL-supporting media.
24 The Tribunal member noted that the uncle's sister and two brothers had been victims of violence; he seemed to accept the possibility (at least) that this arose out of their relationship with the uncle. The member said: "The Tribunal notes a trend in alleged attempts by the AL to harm close male relatives of (Mr A's) uncle, persons similarly situated with (Mr A) himself, from whom he is apparently not far apart in age." (Original emphasis)
25 The Tribunal member accepted that Mr A has been an active supporter of BNP and that, as such, "he would meet with degrees of opposition from supporters of the governing AL". He did not accept "that serious mistreatment will normally be meted out by all AL activists on all BNP activists". However, he did accept that "charismatic and outspoken BNP activists with particularly high profile histories, like (Mr A's) uncle … are being targeted for persecution by agents of or for the party currently in power in Bangladesh, and may also be targeted by it during its times of opposition". Importantly, the Tribunal also accepted "that such serious mistreatment can extend to close relatives of such charismatic opposition figures".
26 The Tribunal member went on:
"The Tribunal accepts the close familial and political link between (Mr A) and his uncle and gives weight to the credible evidence in this case of efforts to cause serious assault to close relatives of that uncle, including two of his brothers and a sister. The Tribunal accepts that the source of these attacks is, if not precisely the same persons in each instance, probably linked with or supportive of the AL, which is obviously the author of the propaganda against (Mr A's) uncle. The proliferation of attacks, mostly upon adult male relatives close in age to (Mr A's) uncle, is accepted as evidence that the authorities have not maintained appropriate levels of protection of (Mr A's) family. The evidence in the Swedish publication about the attack on (Mr A's) aunt is accepted as evidence that the authorities are probably complicit in all of these attacks and that state protection would therefore have been unavailable to the victims. The Tribunal gives weight to the fact that all of these attacks occurred after the arrest of the uncle. This fact adds to the Tribunal's perception of the perpetrators having attacked as though they considered themselves licensed to do so, due to the political and 'criminal' pariah status of (Mr A's) uncle. The Tribunal accepts that had (Mr A) remained in Bangladesh in the last three years, the chance of his being assaulted or killed too, by agents of the AL with the tacit or active support of the authorities, would not have been remote. Since the most recent serious attack on a member of the family occurred in 1999, the Tribunal is unable to conclude that there has been any apparent change in circumstances affecting (Mr A) for the better."
27 The Tribunal member then set out findings about the relationship between Mr A and Mr B. On the basis of their written and oral statements and documents supplied to the Tribunal, the member concluded their relationship "is an intimate, exclusive, viable and emotionally interdependent one and that by simple definition they are a homosexual couple". The member went on:
"Bearing in mind, then, the Tribunal's findings in relation to (Mr A), the situation for (Mr B), in these circumstances, need not be assumed to be much better. (Mr A's) family appears to have a high profile and to be subject to considerable scrutiny by the authorities and the media. In the event that he were to return to Bangladesh with or around the same time as (Mr A), and in the likely event that they would, at the very least, try to keep each other's company and probably want to protect each other to the extent possible or practicable, the chance of his being harmed in the presence of (Mr A), by AL-supporting or AL-supported perpetrators, does not appear to be remote. The chance that (Mr B) might even be harmed in his own right, as a means of harming (Mr A), also does not appear to be remote.
The Tribunal cannot rule out the possibility that, given the evident but unwarranted notoriety of the uncle's family, his and his relatives' political enemies may easily detect the relationship between (Mr B) and (Mr A) and use it to defame them for the purposes of political advantage. It does not take a wild imagination to conceive that a party capable of framing individuals with illegal arms possession, as the US Department of State reports, would not stoop to fermenting a sex scandal, especially in a largely Islamic society with laws that provide what was referred to earlier as a kind of statutory justification for such an attack.
Defaming the Applicants as homosexuals alone might not, depending on the circumstances amount to persecution, but it is easy to accept, given the other evidence of persecution in the case of (Mr A's) family, that it might contribute to a sense of impunity on the part of political enemies in their mistreatment of (Mr A) and (Mr B)."
28 The Tribunal member concluded, in respect of this claim, that "the chance of (Mr A) and (Mr B) being persecuted for reasons of 'political opinion' is not remote. Therefore, as ruled in Chan v Minister for Immigration and Multicultural Affairs (1989) 169 CLR 379, the Tribunal is obliged to consider that it is real".
29 Turning to the matter of membership of a particular social group, the Tribunal member referred to material submitted to him dealing with the place of homosexuals (especially male homosexuals) in Bangladesh society. He concluded:
"The Tribunal is satisfied that the Applicants, as homosexuals, are indeed members of a 'particular social group' for the purposes of the Convention. That said, and bearing in mind the evident manifestations of stigma associated with homosexuality in Bangladesh, it is still another matter whether, merely for being found or imputed in Bangladesh to be homosexuals, the Applicants face a real chance of Convention-related persecution."
The member went on to say he did "not accept that such demonstrations of ill-will as verbal expressions of scorn or ostracism, on their own, amount to persecution for the purposes of the Convention". However, he thought there were special considerations in the cases before him. He explained:
"The present Applicants are accepted as being in an established and evidently committed relationship with each other. It has evidently survived obstacles of displacement, furtiveness and limited income. It is necessary for the Tribunal to take into account the significance of this relationship.
The Tribunal accepts as highly plausible the Applicants' claims to the effect that their families do not know of their relationship and would oppose it if they knew about it. The Tribunal takes into account the potentially greatly diminished influence of families and of Bangladeshi society on the Applicants' relationship in Australia. It considers relevant the fact that (Mr A) is the next son in his family who is in line to marry and that (Mr B) is an only child.
The Applicants' files include documents from a number of independent sources citing family and other societal pressure in Bangladesh for all adults to marry, usually in order of sibling seniority. The Tribunal accepts on the basis of the independent evidence in the Applicants' files that were they to return to Bangladesh they would soon be under probably insuperable social pressure from their respective families, possibly employing substantial emotional manipulation, to marry women. The Tribunal accepts that such pressure would be immensely difficult to resist.
Still, it is not reasonable to conclude, from these analyses, that the pressure upon an individual in Bangladesh to be married in young adulthood is, on its own, a manifestation of ill-will towards homosexuals: it obviously serves many other interests. As imprisoning and devastating as heterosexual marriage may feel to an individual male homosexual in Bangladesh, the denial of liberty that may come as a result of his family and society forcing him to marry may not fall within the Convention if this pressure is indiscriminate, say for example, where his family and society do not even know he is homosexual, or where they suspect it but see it as a phase, or an occasional taste, and are prepared to turn a blind eye to it.
In the present case, however, the prospect of being forced to marry has additional serious and direct implications. The Tribunal accepts that, in the event of being forced to return to Bangladesh, and in the event of (Mr A) not yet succumbing to a continuation of the campaign against his family, the Applicants would want to try to keep each other's company and resist arranged heterosexual marriages as long as they could. In this very probable scenario, the Tribunal perceives that there is more than a remote chance of their relationship being discovered by their families and by wider society. This chance is, as noted earlier, increased as a result of the notoriety (Mr A's) family has acquired as a result of affiliations, real and imputed, with his jailed uncle. It would appear common for families to intervene just at the thought of a homosexual relationship between their sons. Consequently, the Tribunal accepts that there would be a real chance of early, strenuous efforts on the respective families' part to break up the Applicants' relationship.
How is all this Convention-related? Bearing in mind the earlier-cited principles … by which it is bound, the Tribunal considers it impossible to perceive that family and other societal measures to separate the Applicants from each other could operate in ignorance of the suffering it would cause them and the damage it would (probably hopefully) cause to their relationship. This is notwithstanding the action potentially being 'justified' in the eyes of its agents, the families, as being for the Applicants' 'own good'. Accordingly, the Tribunal considers it impossible to perceive that efforts to separate the Applicants and marry them off can be isolated from a desire on the part of the 'persecutors' to repress or extirpate the homosexuality with which they were confronted …, for reasons of the Applicants being two 'of those jointly condemned in the eyes of their persecutors' …, and a sense of malignancy and ill-will towards their status not only as homosexuals but as a homosexual couple. The Tribunal concludes, then, that there is much more than a 'bare causal connection' between the Applicants' status as homosexuals, or as homosexuals in a relationship together, and the harm they face.
The Tribunal does not accept that this is merely a 'but for' issue, because if the families and society know they are forcing two members of a homosexual couple to marry, they are not merely imposing something alongside their relationship, say to distract them, but, rather, they are imposing upon them something that cannot allow any reasonable room for that pre-existing relationship to survive." [Original emphasis]
30 The Tribunal member noted there are laws and conventions against heterosexual relationships outside marriage; but he argued there was there the possibility of relief from pressure by marriage. If the couple were forced to separate, that might be due to the existence of a prior promise or other non-Convention factor. Where marriage was effectively outlawed because it was inter-caste, inter-racial or inter-religious, the member thought, "the action of breaking up should reasonably be seen as persecutory". The member then said:
"The Tribunal accepts if an exclusive, intimate, consensual and adult relationship, whether heterosexual or homosexual, faces a real chance of being shattered by the state, or society in general, or even by some small but ultimately highly effective sector of it, for reasons linked to the Convention, such as malignancy towards the group to which the partners in that relationship belong, then they face a real chance of Convention-related persecution.
…
To sum up, taking all of this evidence and these considerations into account, the Tribunal is satisfied that the chance of the Applicants' relationship being discovered by their families and by society in Bangladesh is not remote. The Tribunal must therefore accept, as per Chan, that it is real. The Tribunal is also satisfied that the chance of their being forced to abandon their relationship due to the contempt of family and society towards their membership of it and of what homosexuality represents to Bangladesh society is not remote. The Tribunal must therefore accept, as per Chan, that it too is real. The Tribunal also accepts as real the chance that the Applicants will respectively be forced into formal commitments with partners of a gender to which they have an innate aversion and, more to the point, that these partnerships will preclude all possibility of their maintaining the relationship they have hitherto cultivated together.
The Tribunal is not satisfied that the state in Bangladesh offers any effective protection anywhere within its borders from the serious interference and harm the Applicants claim to fear, let alone to a couple one half of which is from an already 'notorious' family. The Tribunal does not accept that elopement within Bangladesh or mere discretion on the Applicants' part can be prescribed as a alternative to protection under the Convention, so pervasive are the elements, evidently, that would press them to separate and formalise other partnerships.
The Tribunal is satisfied that the chance of the Applicants being persecuted for reasons of 'membership of a particular social group, namely their status not only as Bangladeshi homosexuals but also as two Bangladeshi homosexuals identifying as a couple, is not remote. It must therefore be considered to be real." [Original emphasis]
31 The member concluded that both applicants were persons to whom Australia has protection obligations under the Convention and "respectively satisfy" the criterion set out in s36(2) of the Migration Act for the granting of protection visas.